Dog poop-scooping enforcement takes page from 'CSI'

Chicago-area property managers use DNA testing service to track down pet owners who don't pick up after their canines

Jen Oakey, 23, walks her Yorkshire terrier-Chihuahua mix outside her apartment at the Springs at 127th Apartments in Plainfield. The complex subscribes to a DNA testing service that helps tracks down owners who don’t pick up their dogs’ waste. (Chuck Berman, Chicago Tribune)

Steve Heldenbrand stood beside the crime scene in southwest suburban Plainfield with a tiny spatula and a clear plastic vial in his hand.

Determined to find the culprit, he scooped up a chunk of the fresh evidence lying on the lawn and put it in the container. He rushed back to the office and placed the vial in a hazardous materials bag. Then he set the sample of dog poop on a shelf next to four others, all waiting to be tested at the lab for DNA.

"I just can't believe people are stupid enough to not pick up after their dog, especially when we have this DNA testing," said Heldenbrand, maintenance supervisor for the Springs at 127th Apartments. "They're gonna get caught, and they're gonna get fined. That's all there is to it."

The once-lowly pooch poop-scooping business has taken a page out of "CSI" and is now cataloging canines across the country and using dog DNA to track down owners who break property rules.

In the Chicago area, a Barrington condo association and a Plainfield apartment complex subscribe to a service that helps connect dog poop to the dog owners who don't clean up after their pets. When caught, owners face steep fines that increase if the offense continues.

At the 340-unitPlainfield apartment complex,40 percent of residents have canine companions. The gated community didn't have a major problem with dog droppings but signed up for PooPrints about a month ago because it wanted to be proactive, said Kelsey Sheehan, assistant property manager.

Under PooPrints — the service also used at the Barrington condos — dog owners provide DNA swabbed from inside their pet's mouths to the property management company, which requires them to do so under an amended pet policy, said Mike Stone, Chicago distributor of PooPrints.

The DNA swab is sent to a lab in Knoxville, Tenn., where it is stored in a database. If dog poop is found on the ground, management sends a nickel-sized sample to the lab, where it can be checked against the registry.

Once a match is found, the lab notifies Stone, who sends a letter to the property manager. If dog owners dispute the findings, they swab their dog again for DNA. Usually the concept alone is a deterrent, Stone said.

"DNA is undeniable evidence for accountability," he said. "There's only a handful of these poo-petrators, and they don't like it. They don't want to get caught."

Over the past three years, the service has spread to 45 states and three other countries, with the biggest markets in Miami, Minneapolis, Dallas and central North Carolina, said Eric Mayer, director of business development at BioPet Vet Lab, the company that invented PooPrints.

The DNA collection kit costs $40, an amount covered under the pet fees for the Barrington and Plainfield complexes. The fee to analyze the waste sample is an additional $60, along with the $15 for the vial that contains a special solution.

In winter 2011, The Arbors at Barrington started hearing complaints from residents about dog owners not picking up after their pets. One person said it was hard to walk through a common grassy area because of all the dog deposits, said Cia Johnson, a member of the condo association's board.

After doing some research, Johnson, a veterinarian, discovered the dog DNA tests and informed the condo's board, which then passed a policy last summer that fines dog owners $50 for the first offense and $300 for the third. The pet can be removed from the grounds if the owner chooses not to comply.

A few people were "fairly upset" about the change, and someone chose not to rent at the property because of the policy, Johnson said. But the measure seems to have worked: Since it went into effect in May, only one dog dropping has been found.

How many other companies provide a service similar to PooPrints' is difficult to say. A Google search and calls to animal organizations didn't turn up any similar businesses. The University of California at Davis School of Veterinary Medicine is a leader in DNA dog waste testing and said it has done work for gated communities, condo associations and apartment complexes, mostly in Texas.

The school also said it has helped solve serious crimes involving dog DNA, including a 2000 triple homicide in rural northeastern Indiana in which the three men were shot execution-style.

The suspect claimed he never left the car and only acted as a lookout, but dog feces found on his shoe matched feces at the crime scene, said Beth Wictum, forensic unit director of the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory at UC Davis.

DNA testing on dog poop also helped convict a Texas man of rape in 2008. The California lab linked the feces on his shirt to one of the victim's dogs and the dog's waste in the backyard, where the crime took place, Wictum added.